By running the given data I was able to infer that the majority of people have warmer feelings toward working class than those who collect welfare. I enjoyed analyzing the graphs afterward and seeing the similarities in them. The mean and median suggest the variables have differents results and the correlation coeffiecient further displays the trends are far from the same. Im not sure if it was by fault of mine that R did not calculate the mode as they are clearly visible on the histograph. I believe it could be the differences in what each variable measured that resulted in there being no standard deviation available. I was not suprised by the support shown for working class people, although I did not suspect that such a decent amount of people would feel warmly toward people collecting welfare. It was pleasing to see humility from such a large group of americans.
Scatter Plot
(This is really interesting to me!)
Violin Plot of Working Class
People on Welfare Violin Plot
Good job! The function to calculate standard deviation is sd(variablename), just to remind you. This also could have been improved by giving me paragraph by paragraph narrations of what's going on in your findings. Tell me a story with the data! You did a fine job, just try to be more precise and thorough with respect to all the different results you find. You didn't actually quite demonstrate that you have a strong command over the mathematical concepts and the formulas that we're employing to generate these graphs! That said, nice work.
By running the given data I was able to infer that the majority of people have warmer feelings toward working class than those who collect welfare. I enjoyed analyzing the graphs afterward and seeing the similarities in them. The mean and median suggest the variables have differents results and the correlation coeffiecient further displays the trends are far from the same. Im not sure if it was by fault of mine that R did not calculate the mode as they are clearly visible on the histograph. I believe it could be the differences in what each variable measured that resulted in there being no standard deviation available. I was not suprised by the support shown for working class people, although I did not suspect that such a decent amount of people would feel warmly toward people collecting welfare. It was pleasing to see humility from such a large group of americans.
Good job! The function to calculate standard deviation is sd(variablename), just to remind you. This also could have been improved by giving me paragraph by paragraph narrations of what's going on in your findings. Tell me a story with the data! You did a fine job, just try to be more precise and thorough with respect to all the different results you find. You didn't actually quite demonstrate that you have a strong command over the mathematical concepts and the formulas that we're employing to generate these graphs! That said, nice work.